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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Advocate, 1887-10-13, Page 3teiantraos re,,tb—alfOltoPP00..) Werkrl. 7.711 .0'1 untit f'301,9 ,f ,bach The Bank ,nf London On Saturday began ,itlie-redereptionroritsbU1, eoneiderable • number being presented -When the deposi- - tore. i'41.1'.1)047aaid iPt.Pt.ft matter latiOn. , . , : The he netshells and ebean Which ,oi fani (.1 kir suceessfnlly Maniptilated it the King; stoilfair have oosome Of the citizens fr ,gatidkitr.9ttrapney. Their eXpntlentei cest It e"•?, tol$0. #044 ie reported that Dan Prault, who eiv tegi*:??1)110.98.-Ack •• keg'. PYgiPg to a draw -bar breaking while coupling care at Ainherstburg a few days ago, is dying afrom the. effects'of bloodpoisoning. c 4" Tth' GC dThe onann ee,s e ,-. p, toss Guild, who have been making inquiry into the statementimsli.to,0.theyidehapoliery 'of children at 'Ottawa" dritthat theteni mueli truth in the•statements made, and propose f6,'41Citeaiktaeerqf the AttotiiiiyfOieneral '1 of 'Onta1164itli*nvieteofi itinqiiag utthe ItOillitithe 1441.4 gon61;,ttaii, 114`' - :rfiltanyer, foreman ,of the ,I.Empire Oil 'Works, LyinleteKeir .Eride,4 eyening,`;,Wed . sent to calique.failier td•teav ',:.The•.(ofacfi • when in one of the rooms where the oil is fa 0 p,uniffiTiiitirthe agitator, becante over . 504131 ful*figt311°4101CPnai. ,ene,,,,t medical Messrs. J. Milligan and L. McGill, Se: Thonntbondemen • for Alex, Perry,, .the, 4bobk agent who' juniped his bail, were on. 'Saturday compelled to Pay' suretiee of 1100 eaoh. Perry represented A the houseof Bradley, Garretson & Co., Brantford, and 41i t otige.pNitodAidthohiatining money until 4.'"3..falileiipltOnefti,by,sen4ing in bognit, order trittlieliriii, i whichAie receiVed OththW :anon. , The Kingston assessor 4hrough • with hiework. He states that the change ;thd few regarding titiable income Will make a difference in the assessmentof ( about $200,000rWhichr hoWeVer,fie; mere than made up bl,airincrin the itegese;; ment of real estate. The census does not showtheinorease of .population to be such *awlit ze tWRISKSI1t.AS310Ved 'ntit ia neVer- , theless vertreaterial. Betivein,306Pand oahougs are in conree'orefeetion. „ *Detective Pheir On " ,Saturday iigbt arrested John U. Stuart? a London town: (-ship farmer, op the charge of threatening " ' the life of E. J. Harris, a 'well-known' deritilitt Stuart states that his wife was induced to desert him by Harris, with • ..,,whornathe Went. to liVei,•=althorigh 'Hattie ; Alhamalwifef, and ;child of his own. Stuart e' lankirie'orhis Wife 4ately, see- , epecting?iliat slie,Waillstaying With Harris, andnn Meeting 'the doctor threatened to :shoot him. Hence Stuart's arrest. The Woman is over40 and Harris is more than .,50 years old. . • A.sadicsee 9f Buieicle :a3Pourred at 'Chelsea, Ont., under singularly distressing .sircumstances. Minnie Allan, an °Arm - live 'girl of '19,1aiighter of a respectable farmer living near the village, died on " 'Thursday evening from ", the effects of poison, administered, as subsequent events . proved, by herself. She was ill on the Wednesday, and on Thursday morning .early medical assistance was summoned as tithe seemed very ill. Dr. Davis, who was :sent for, on arriving found that her re. .00very was impossible. She would have „ become a Mother in a few ,months. After •tthe girl's death'retters were found. stating that she had been betrayed under ,promiee :ofniarriage. A• fortnight ago her levier :married another woman, and this had such :ten effect On Minnie Allan'e, mind that, as the girl herself stated, she preferred death •to thediegrace Which was about to .over- take her. Four Englishmen recently captured, by -brigands near Smyrna have been liberated on payment of a ransom of £750. ,The Brennan totpedo, putohased by the late British Government for £115,000, is to •be sulinditted te a test in 'etibret .at Potts.' mouth this month. Grave doubts are among torPedoists as tof ite iniccess. Complaints are still made of the depre. dations of French fishermen on English maks in the North Sea. The „Imperial Government are being urged. t6 ,,send superior vessels with electric light td afford .. adequate protection. There is no truth in the etitenient that ...-;,:the'Prince of Wales will open the Vathe. dral at Truro. While in aotintell,be Will '^ Anake several visits and ilk* , himself, • • ..,,,,eatmongst the Cornish people, 16 . most of When' he is a stranger. '• • , It is believed that theobjeottf the coni-: r':::•:aing, conference between Prince Bismarck .taind 'Signor Crispi, the Italian Piiine, Minis- ..„ to renew the military convention be. , ween Italy, Austria aiid Germany and to ,:establish a central EurOpetiti• The Hygienie dOngreenthat Malden it - ting at Vienna .approved of theiEnglish method of thoroUghAdisinfeetion. In pre. ference to quatintineior thepreliention of t the epread of epidemics: , The: Ccingtese else favored Okeination for the disposal of • the dead. to, avAdvices,frora.;Weet(Aftica state,that the Otnisuleqiale.P,CaMied the attest Of King7aja Of .0Perlici.for.4ieoratly PreNient, ing the access of traders to the interior. Ring Jaja oidered,the riatiVisrrot to do any trading except throngt his egente, and enforced his order by beheading 15() Of his , ,..subjecte as a watningto, others.• Thetotal deorease in' the ;United States debtlestamonth Was If(14,247;99.,.,5 • - Edwards' lodging house in Detroit was destMyed by fire on Saturday morning and three of the, lodgers berneetto 'death Throe men and two boys were suffocated and thirteen Others partially overcome by gas in a mine at Ashland, Pa., on.Stitiltday. Three deaths from Oholerei, Oecurred at • ' Island, New York harbor, on •Saturday,,,Md 'fiVe innV oiniee *ere taken • there. t , Thousands of people' Woke turned away here Plymouth 'Chetah, Brooklyn, yester., ' day, When the •pliiee occupied for feisty ,yeate by Henry Ward Beecher Was filled • by bis intimate friend and possible SRO, • • cesser, Reis. Joseph Parker, MD., of Lon-, , don.With pt. Parket ii the pulpit Was Dr. Beeehet'e ferniek adeietitne aha„ the "f- I Present seting pastor e Relit S., B. Etalliday, D.D. In the t/rare peW sat Mein Beeolie; t 0* '4 V' itivp r A. report has toadied troOkhaili, tilat serious trouble.' la -brewing, between npgroes and ,whites about twenty miles itouthesikOt ttit149900.4114inle •Ana Pi4CP400417frekcie"0.04fikos4i ,Aeut Bo? *owl* 014,400144,145‘44Ittiii! 1?e iInctek arms and a collision" is feared: . Severe: villt0;141,9,"Ye 194 be Y44.0.100 .11iErfok he scenePf fr.qu'i41 • (L" 444 :Lunsuai.scerks =mot ut the Metro.',. o1itji'Methqdist Episcopal iChurclt, alhingtort; le.st night, Whe'irlteV.' John P. Newinan,,4n orniony ' alluded in severe terms to theAnarchiste! Could anyiAnterican*tiapri4i 'he said, tentyeare ago?"(h*vCiMajintki0the oiroula- lion of a petition to «parcloi those wimp hands are red with the blood of the *- fenders; ofv, the ..public peace 'and, safety?. What is back of this anarehyr-this dare devil movement on the part of these wheonght,to hit -ye been hung long 'ago V!, a At this poiriOnilany of the midi; ence rose to their feet, clapped their hands, PP4Titt109ud" demonstrations announced' their approval of the minister's words.' r grid iiy ws the Einprees, of "'Germany's 170thIbirthdaYt-Tlielbjildtilgskin Berlin, ;and ',9t4ed am were decorated „with flags- and 'Minting inolionorpOthe, occasion. King Le6Pold orBelgilina; Eintieror and Empreesstrkazil and the Baden, Princes *ego -lite& their congratulations to the •Enipiese: The,i,wife of the, late 11,9n..,,jelin Mac- fAuierYlio o of (Kth,ingclocli mAiteird„, 7811134 ,,cd:aatypirwhoili‘ iine H e switching a train. • A. manAotoriT had been arrested at Neolre, for, bigamy. Be comes from Morden, and an effort will be made to have him extradited. inaugutalleoturskinonneotion with Ale establishment .7 of ,.1;the„,1 new medical, faculty of the Torlintolinivardity was •de. livered by Prof. Ramsay Wright yesterday afterno4 ((• 444 A conference on Evangelistio moth iq, conneotim with -,the Pretibyterian Chinch, was commenced yesterday afternoon in the C�ntraIkpteribyterian Church, Toronto': Delegatesste present from all parts of the Ptovinee.- During the ptogreseof the storm at Lon- doriyeeterday afferding, the residence of Mr;111'.'iGratiner, CO1136tnestreet, was struck bylightnind. 'Berond stunning some of the ocpnpaitsand shattering a portion or the hem° no serious damage was done. Wim Rowlands, M.C.R. brakeman on an extra east -bound freight, while coupling, cars at Rodney �n Sunday morning had his right arm frightfully crushed. He was oncetaken to St., Therrien' imffered ,amputatimof the -injured member. Bettugrand's new paper, the Daily News, made its first appearancein Montreal yesterday. It is printed on pink paper, has four pages of seven columns each, professes to have been established as &money making enterprise, but is Liberal in politics. ' Mr. P. J. U. Beaudry, assistant clerk of the Privy„Council, died at .Ottawa yester- :day afterntion of typhOid foyer efteta short illness. He had held' the poeition of assist- ant clerk for three years, and was highly esteemed by all those acquainted with him. The inquest on the body of Thos. Camp- bell, 'who„:was drowned'through the ferry boat collision in Toronto Bay, was con- cluded last night, when the jury returned a verdict that Campbell's death was caused by the negligence of Capt. Martin, of the Sadie, and a warrant was iesued for his arrest. The two-year-old eon of Joseph Gran- •thani,1 caretaker of Trinity Church, St. Thomas, had s,nhrtos7 escape from a ter- rible death yesterday morning. The child toddled into a,stable where his father was currying a Wise,. and was kicked by the animal in the head and thrown through the door„ receivingterrible flesh wounds, but ,nothing more ititious. 7 guifa.k night burglars brOke into the Grand Trunk station at Exeter and forced the safe open by breaking off the hingesand drivingspikes iirby the side of the door, but did not get any booty, as there was no money in the safe. • Burglars also broke into HaWkshaw'S' hoteh and stole three overcoats, a revolver, a pair of shoes, a watch and a meerschaum nipe. Noslue to - „. „ the burglars. • t, Alfred Jones, aged 14, allieni SI( 'George Jones, of Lambeth,rnet ivithe paininf dent the other, day. 'He was on the straw 'stack helping to' :. hang the: barn -door, when by a sudden nioyementlie Was thrown violently, tnthe gtmindrind striking the •hoolion which the door Waite hang, out hie back severely froin-. the shoulder bladedownweirdi and:mines: The oat was abOnt flare inches long. Arimandeus ,Anderson, a Swedish Mil- grent,'aged 17; died trona exhaustion and insufficient xiOurishinent on a Miehigan Central train' while ,paseing through St. Thomas on Sunday night en route to Buffalo to join his Mother and sister:- The tumor spread among other emigrants that the cause of death Was Adatio ' cholera, and excitement retii high until Dr. Smith, the company's physician in St.Thomas, assured them there was no cause Wilk*. , 7 The wife of Chitties Carroll; a farmer living on the Mount Brydges road, near Stratbroy,,, was found. on. Saturday. after- nooriliangnig in the 'heti*: dead. ' Mr. John Carta, cousin of the deceitsedis-hulibend, had been,ploughing for hie ,relative, and on Coming ii to dinner sew the body hanging and Out it dOwni The wonian .had: appar- ently chi:abed up into the mow, attached a rope te one Of the poles fotining a scaffold some eleven feet above the floor, and there hanged, „herself: There wad no apparent motive for the deed. " W. H. Stuart appeared at the London Police Court yesterday to anewer the charge of threatening to shoot E. J. Harris the latter having, according to Stuart's ;tory, entioed aVVity the defendant's' Wife. The case was referred to in yesterday's Tis. Mrs.- Stuart appeared as a vvitness for Harris. She said she married 8tuirt about ttvo 'years age, but finding he already had a wife and tanillY,, she turned hini, out Of her home, whioh was left her by her first him - band. She took Stuart back WACO and then disearded him for " keep." Harris, on being asked why he Md not go and live with his own wife, intimated that he pre- ferred to manage hie ovvn domestic* Affairs: The caseended in Stuart being bound over torypep,plepeaee , !Antes brordon',Venneitt,4,11Vpillish.' a newspaper in Paris, to be known as tho Buropean Herald.' 'It will be tinedpIled' after •the New York rferald. ohn popi is 4:4ht.,911:0597, 1:,°a9(1141:7tAtalne:Pli.1,11 since the ponderous lexicographer llae4 1•:); Barntlel „ 0404:,g0iiyier Cabinet j looking 'forward the'reassembling of the Chambers With feelitigelhe reverse of agreeable, as quee, t0iawl interP014tilmBregarding is hoine and foreign pOig tbreateri it from every quatter, The Rome Riforma says accord •between the Dhurch and Itaiy 18 iP11398eible unless the 'church ahaplone her pretensions. 11 v014 tojhe .(naYantage of the Papal See, 'even in,ite, relations with othet States, if it could be`larought to comprehend the '1-Wri4li'it4,11areeiineal'IPilt1 'am., is that. the lierthens to6k King Malietoa on board a ginaboat fer tkl.elpUrppse, :of exiling him on account of his 'failure to prevent his people from robbing German plantations. King '4.1Sle1ieto, hi d\ preytouelyf written to the ,Britisli and Amernian' Cansale expressing disappeintment p2.3 absence a their sup. port. ,. " Biriris;whoWas arsrwood's successor as hangelanyhas been iikehatged for drunken- ness.*He is travelling in Cheshire with a show whichdepicts an execution scene, with a chaplain, ,officiale, reporters, etc., a wax 13300'el ofoldie: Berry' rthe Oldham Prisoner, being dropped through a trap.. Great crewde, attend the, performance, which ie disgustingly realistic, and' efforts will be made to etop it; • T,he,ultra7Protestant.,(:Party is by no 47,4a$Nritiffettafthe electien of the new -Derceyser is .a Beigiaii4Catholic,13ut hepfomised to r000g- i?ize„efficially none but the State religion, as was dene by his predecessors'who were Quakers .orNenconfotraister. Ille.DeKeyser, who is the first Catholic, Lord Mayer since the'ReierinationA is "a 'filiPshie man and elver Spetther.ih knoveni, to Ameri, eansas e the carientiof the 'Royal` Hotel, Blaokfriars. The Stet contingent of troops' which Spain will send to Morocco has been desnatolieg, teonsists;of 6,000 men. The object of sending this force is to protect the interests of Spain in Morocco in case the country relapses into a state of anarchy, which is feared Will follow the death of the Sultan.- giofi battalions of infantry, be- sides cavalry and artillery, have been con- centrated at Cadiz and Malaga, in readiness to cross over to Morocco immediately. This force is under command of Gen. Lasso. 'Several- war ships are also in readiness for active service., For some time, Mormon meetings have been held by missionaries from America in Pentonville road, London. These meetings have been held in private houses, but bills have been extensively circulateinviting any one to attend. One of those meetings was held on Sunday night in a small house. A crowd collected outside. Speeches were made about polygamy in Utah and the mob forced an entrance through a window. A scene of great excitement and confusion ensued. The landlord, fearing the destruc- tion of hie property, sent for the police, but before they arrived the wall of the gardensnd that separating it from thenext garden were 'thrown down, end probably worse would have happened but for the ar- rival of a sergeant and six constables. The Mormon missionaries and their disciples got out at the back of the house. Decline of Matrimony. Marriages increase as we approach the lowest grade where there is the least pride, ambition ot energy other than animal or self -preserving. They decrease as we ascend to the grades where acquisitiveness, bnsiness enterprise, intellectual tastes, political or social opportunities, or what not, induce a larger activity in the indi- vidual, involving the necessity of larger preparations and resources outside of mere self.support. And the reason is found not only in the unwillingness of the woman to begin,,with her husband, in a lower scale °Hiving in the household and in society, but as well in the unwillingness of the man to change his style of living to snit the con- ditiom of matrimony, to deny his wife any rthe'advantages she enjoyed before mar - even for himself to sacrifice part et his, other aims and anibitions to the Maintenance of a wife and a home. To "Come at the point briefly from another direction, a survey of the conditions seems to indicate that the tendenoy of the times in education, society; habit, life in general, is to unfit women for becoming' wives and men for becoming husbands. Domesticity is infringedliy the multiplication of social, business and professional cares and re- sponsibilities, the inducements to marriage lessened in number and force, and the family and thehome, our national bulwark, threatened with decay through, neglect for more selfish individual considerations and ambitions.—Springfield Union. English Literary Notes. ' The forthcoming life of Rev. Dr. Morley Punshon will contain many interesting facts not previously published. Professor MacDonald, of Edinburgh, is the biogra- pher. The details of the five years he spent in Canada are silt:plied by Professor Rey - net, Dr. Punshon's son-in-law. Messrs. ' Isbieter announce the second volume of beaniPlunitree's "Dante," a com- pletion of the work; also "Everyday Christian Lite," by Archdeacon Farrar. Mr. Swinburne has also finished a new drama to be called " Locrine." " Scenes from the George Eliot Conn - try," by Stephen Parkinson, is the title of a volume now -in press, which deals more especially with the early life of George Eliot and identifies characters in her novels with persons of whom she had knowledge in actual life, and places and scenery with portions of the midland counties amid which she Spent her youth and young Womanhood. Ile* He Got Those Black yes. • ttagd , to tat who has bean arrested for _ . 'beating Mike*Well, you aid pound him, didn't yen? yer honor ; I ettricik hike On the Met& the 411(0 tait of hid Mild fade. ,e 'jade; in iiiittmieliiiment--On his nose? Jnet:look at :hie eyes.. * ' hOdidn't hettld shall When r stenelt ANMER WAR 14011P. 7.41; *1?.011111.1 Pecanao ,/invere4 'esterft War '? A London cable ;' inner offictiA circle -W9111&13e SUrPF Y.14149' P40T44, 144i84. the march from Quetta towaril .04 All the /lows from: Afghanistan oho the poettien, E6P4 lie4th Of thA Artie are declining. Instead of his quell Pililzai'reVcati, la reported, it is no spread and stronger then ever, is gene- rals are apparently no longer striving 16 pope with it; The Atneer himself.gives very little time to affaire of State, heing in a condition Of great despondency aver hie iI1ness.ohangingehin &titers continnally, i , and it 's reported that he is making life a genuine burden for each as the failure of his cure becomes apparent. Ayoub Khan is said to be on the pad to, g4ndahor him- self, but all these reports of 'hisowhereA- aheute are distrusted -at the Indian snd Foreign Officee as Oriental lice. Nothing is regarded ati sun') abourhirn, Save that he ie bound te ,mithe trouble. His pre- tensions to the . throne are -being aided by the` A:Meet's 'illness ad un- pepularityand the (infancy of his sap, if not by Russian intrigne, This last is ust no an uncertain quantity. Infact,7thete are reasons, for believing that Russia ,for, the present is very anxious to secure Eng- lish friendehip as an offset to Prince:Bis rnarek'e Continental combination, and is milling to abandon it good -deal in Asia for the sake of scouring it; but there are other reasons for 'believing that Elution agents in Asia are acting in ignorance or defiance of this new inaperial policy to undermine. the English in genii. So the whole thing is in a maze, Sir West Ridgeway, who succeeds General Buller; is absolutely without ex- perience other, than Oriental. Those Who' know him speak highly of him, and he has certainly done good work on the Russo. Afghan frontier. His article in the Nine- teenth' iCentury on the frontier ought ,to encourage faith in Lard , Salisbury's old advice to' study large mapsHe believes that Russia will keep her word reepecting the status quo. Hitherto, he says, the Rue - elan advance in Asia has been likulhe gliding of a knife throngh butter, but now, that it touches Afghanistan it has met the hard substance of the dieh. He scouts the idea of an invasion of,India. It would be madness, he argues, in the Russian Generale, who depend. for their supplies upon a single lightly constructed railroad, to leave Weir rear exposed to the hostile, excited races of Central Asia. Sir West Ridgeway speaks well of the personal re- gard and friendship of the Russian officers and the bulk of thepeople toward English men.: " Then let the moon usurp the rule of day, And winking tapers show the sun his way; For what my senses can perceive, I need no revelation to believe." Ladies suffering from any of the weak- nesses or ailments peculiar to their sex, and who will use' Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- scriptions according,to directions, will ex- perience a genuine revelation in the benefit they will receive. It is a positive cure for the most complicated and obstinate cases of leucorrhea, excessive flowing, painful men- struation, unnatural suppressions, pro- lapsus, or fallinOf the womb, weak back, " female Weakness," anteversion, retrover- sion, bearing -down sensations, ohronic con- gestion, inflammation and ulceration of the womb, inflammation, pain and tenderness in ovaries, accompanied with "internal heat." An interesting Diary. A. Bronson Alcott has kept a journal eve y since he was a boy. Among the earliest entries are the following: "Went in swimming to -day. Read Plato while dryin' off and got awfully sunburnt." " To- day began kriticle study of the Greke fret gedise, but Ralf Emerson come round and we conclooded to go after Chipmunks."— Burlington Free Press. Poison's Nerviline, Hundreds who have experiencedthe won- derful power of Nerviline in subduing pain have testified that it is the most potent remedy in existence. Nerviline is equally efficacious as an internal or an external remedy, Poison's Nerviline cures flatulence, °hills, spasms, cholera, cramps,' headache, sea -sickness, summer complaint, etc., etc., Nerviline is sold by all druggists and country dealers. Only 25 cents a bottle. Try it. Two Important Questions for Girls. Here is a postscript to a girl's letter : "When you write next answer me in confi- dence two questions: Can you lace your boots with your corsets on? And can you put on your bonnet with your bodice on? I want to know. M."—London Truth. Happiness. The foundation of all happiness is health. A man with a perfect digestion may be a millionaire, may be the husband of an angel and the father of half a dozen cherubs, and yet be miserable if he be troubled with dyspepsia, or any of the dis- orders arising from imperfect digestion or a sluggish liver. Dr Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets are the safest and surest remedy for these morbid conditions. Being purely vegetable, they are perfectharmless The Decline of the Dance. The dancing of our youth was really an able-bodied exercise. The original polka fatigued the muscles like wood -chopping or sowing: But -now these same muscles have given in to costuine. Necessity has laid upon them that they shall have no free motion. Some krenoh writer said that the waltz had killed the dance. Crinoline and tie.backs have in their turn killed the waltz. Hifalutin.— o g Reporter—" Tho storna-Kng hurled his torn and tumbling tOrrents.over the ruitili of the broken and distheinhered edillee." Old Editor—"What's that? What do,yonrileitn, young fellow ?" Young Reporter*" I-4-e-er,--the flood waghaa, away PiLtrick MoDongal's old soap fitotorY. Sage' Catskill Ileinedy. 50 cents. Thousands Of Cured folio* the inie of Dr. A hers° that recently fell en and killed an Indian near'. Garfield,. IdahOe was, made the subject of a barbecue by, the surviving relatives of the departed redskin. But she was grown a And:half the town, was round b or. " I see," Bawl he, "you ,don't want mei" ^ Theugh tears were ripe or shedding. "lin glad your eyes are geed," sttid she— " wherelithet golden weddinglr Ple,flung away, and ieft her there, ,Suoh heart -sore tear drops shedding, • And gossips cried, ia blank despair, ." She 'sPolled the rarest wedding? 'llesailedthe'seas, he beat tboi 0;an.04. • Two score good years he tarrisd,,A And'then be thought, " That little vs-6mil- 1 vrender If she's married ?" Next week a bluff °biter rolled past', The gabled High street treading,, andanoient gossips crewed, :0 At last. We're like to have the -wedding 1", • „ She waited for him forty years— ,, The gray their locks were threading; And sorne with smiles and some wit/Opal:a, Beheld their: sliver Nyedding, —Goon- Worms. Monkeytown iethe naine of a new post - office in Yazoo County, MississiPpi. • ' • The *IOW 'ter C_ —ITT r alrant 4vikat,tv 0 LIVER t P Sit C5 5 ILLS BZW-4RE ..aft° IMITATIONS. .4•LW4T5 ASIC '.FOR DR. PIERCE'S PELLETS, OR LITTLE'SUGAR-COATED PILLS. Being entirely ,xegetablo, they op- erate without disturbance to the system, diet, or occupation, Put up in glassvials, hermeti- cally sealed. Always fresh and 'reliable. As a laxative, alterative,.or,,purgative, 'these little Pellets give the 'most perfect satisfaction. SICK HEADACHE, , Bilious Headache; Dizziness, Constipa- tion, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangementh of the stom. itch and bowels, are prompt- ly relieved and permanently cured by the use of Dr. " Pierces Pleasant Purgative Pellets. In explanation of the remedial power a these Pellets over so great a variety of diseases, it may truthfully be said that their action upon tho system is universal, not a gland or tiesue escaping their sanative influence. Sold by druggists, 25 cents a vial. Manufactured at the Chemical Laboratory of WORLD'S Inearnistany MIDICAL ASSOCIATION, BOW°, N. Y. $500 REWARD is offered by the manufactur- ers of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, for a case of Chronic Nasal Catarrh which they eannot cure. SYMPTOMS OF CATABB.H.—Dull. heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal passages, discharges falling from the head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes are weak, watery, and inflamed: there is ringing In the_ears. deafness, hacking or coughing to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive matter, together with scabs from ulcers; the voice is changed and has a nasal twang; the breath is offensive; smell and taste are im- paired ; there is a sensation a dizziness, with mental depression, a hacking cough and gen- eral debility. Only a few of the above-named symptoms are likely to bo present in any one case. Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half of the above symptoms, re- sult in consumption, and end in the grave. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, or loss understood by physicians. By its mild, soothing, and healing properties, Dr. Sago's Catarrh Remedy eures the worst cases of Catarrh, "cold in the head," Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache. Sold by druggists everywhere; 50 cents. "Untold Agony /roma Catarrh.” Prof. W. Hausiazu, the famous mesmerist, of Ithaca, N. Y. writes: "Some ten years ago I suffered untold agony from chronic nasal catarrh. My fetidly physician gave Inc up as incurable, and said I must die. My case was such a bad one, that every day, towards sun- set, my voice would become so hoarse I could barely speak above a whisper. In the morning my coughing and clearing of my throat would almost strangle Inc. By the use of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, in three months, I was a well man, and thesure has been permanent." “Constantly Hawking and Spitting." TnomAs J. Rusnitra, Esq., 2902 Pine Street, St. Louts, Mo., writes: "I was a great sufferer from catarrh for three years. At times I could hardly breathe, and was constantly hawking and spitting, and for the last eight months could not breathe throtigh the nostrils. I thought nothing could be done for me. Luck - BY. I was advised to try Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, and I am now a well man. I believe it to be the only sure remedy for catarrh now manufactr:dd, and ono has only to give it a fair trial,th experience astounding remits and a permanent euro." Three Bottles Cure Catarrh. Era Romme, Bunyan P. 0.. Columbia Co., Pa., says "My daughter bad catarrh when she WM five years old, very badly. I saw Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy advertised, and pro. cured a bottle for her, and mon saw that it helped her; a third bottle effected it perma- nent cure. She Is now eighteen years old and 'sound and heatty.' D c N L. 41 87. CONSUMPTION. I have a pointiva remedy for the above Mimes ; by tts thousands or cases ot the worst kind and or long standing bare been cure& Indeed, so strong• -ty. _faith in no orgracr, that I will mond TWO BOTTLES t together. with • YALVABLS TREATISE on this dime... .4 Gar Ingsren, !II"! eR,PITa.ndAr 0LO. aCdttltdre:L Branch Office, 37 Tongs St., Tctiato LINN'S KI OWDEE-1, THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND, coR S When/ aak care I de not mein merely to stop Rent rer Um and then hare them return again., lt Mean a radical cum 14*,, rnade the dilute of PITS, EPILEPSY .I.P111.164 IWO SICKNESS& lifeang study. I warrant my rased/ to care themorat eats,. , Because *there hive Ailed iota raison tif tot nano recet,Ing I Cure. 'Send at thee for • treatise and • rine Skittle of nu irdrilildy, Orr* Wapresideid rat Oficig.. It Coati yonntienive Nr • trt4 and I Fill care you., Addrese DR. IL O. BOOT, Branch 011ice; 37 YonEe St.1 , Toronto.,